THE PRESIDENT: Carlos, thank you. (Applause.) Thank you all.
Not so fast, Senator. Carlos, thanks. I appreciate your service,
Carlos. Thanks for agreeing to be the Cabinet Secretary. Thanks for
leaving the private sector to come to Washington, and bring your family
here to serve our country. You're going to be -- he's going to be a
great Secretary. And for those of you here who work in the Commerce
Department, you're lucky to have him as a boss. Welcome. (Applause.)

I appreciate my friend, Orrin Hatch, joining us. Senator Hatch,
thanks for coming. Senator Hatch, and Senator Cornyn, from the great
state of Texas, are leaders when it comes to legal reform. I want to
thank you for being here. Congressman Bob Goodlatte from the great
state of Virginia is with us, as well. We're honored three members
took time out to come and hear this, what I think is a vital discussion
about how to make America the best place in the world to do business.
Welcome, glad you all are here. (Applause.)

I want to thank the entrepreneurs who are here, the small business
owners and the association members, people who care about legal
reform. I appreciate you coming. I also want to thank our panelists.
We're going to have an interesting discussion about why we need to do
something about class-action lawsuits. That's what we're here to
discuss.

I do want to put it in the larger context, though, about why we
even ought to take on this issue. As Carlos said, lawsuits are -- a
litigious society is one that makes it difficult for capital to flow
freely. And a capitalist society depends on the capacity for people
willing to take risk and to say there's a better future, and I want to
take a risk toward that future. And I'm deeply concerned that too many
lawsuits make it too difficult for people to do that.

And so I've called upon Congress to work with the administration on
legal reform, whether it be to reform the asbestos litigation issue or
medical liability reform to make sure medicine is cost-effective to our
citizens, or whether it be class-action reform. Legal reform is part
of a larger agenda to make sure this economy of ours continues to
grow. We're seeing good growth now. As you know, last month, in the
month of January, this country created 146,000 new jobs. The national
unemployment rate is down to 5.2 percent. This is all progress. But
it's important for the Congress to work with the administration to keep
this progress going. And so legal reform is part of a strategy for
economic vitality and growth.

So is a disciplined budget part of that strategy. I submitted a
budget earlier this week. I'm not surprised some people are yelling
about it already. But it is a budget that is lean and effective and
says we'll spend money on programs that work. And I look forward to
working with Congress to get that budget passed. (Applause.)

It is time for Congress to pass an energy bill. We've been
debating it for too long and now is the time for action. (Applause.)
And I'm confident we can get it done. I believe that Congress has
heard the message from the people that, let's work together to
encourage conservation and renewable sources of energy, and let's spend
money wisely on new technologies, and why don't we promote clean and
safe nuclear power -- all aimed at not only protecting our environment,
but at the same time, making us less dependent on foreign sources of
energy.

So my call to Congress again, like I did a week ago today, was,
let's stop the debate on energy and get a bill to my desk to show the
American people that we can respond. We'll continue to open up markets
for goods overseas and, at the same time, enforce our trade laws.
Carlos is going to be a part of the enforcement mechanism of our trade
laws. We opened up markets to 12 countries over the past four years
through new free trade agreements in countries like Australia and
Singapore. And over the next four years, we'll continue to open up
markets.

And the reason I believe it's important is because when we're good
at something, we ought to make it easier to sell what we're good at
overseas and create new customers for U.S. entrepreneurs and farmers
and ranchers. Given a level playing field, this country can compete
with anybody, any time, anywhere. And so we're going to continue to
work with Congress to advance good trade policy.

We'll work on things like simplifying the tax code, reasonable,
wise immigration reform, good health care policy, as well as taking on
the tough task of strengthening the Social Security system for younger
generations to come.

Now, I understand some have been listening closely to this debate,
and I want to make two points about Social Security before we get to
the subject at hand. One is, we have a problem. For those of you in
Washington who say we don't have a problem, all you got to do is look
at the facts. We don't have enough people paying into the system to
take care of baby boomers like me who are living longer and longer and
longer and are going to be promised more benefits. We've got more
people who are going to be receiving benefits over time, with fewer
payers into the system. And those who are receiving benefits will live
longer and will receive more money. That says we've got a problem.

It is a funding problem. In the year 2027, the federal government
is somehow going to have to come up with $200 billion more than the
payroll tax to make sure we fulfill the promise. And the problem gets
worse and worse. Starting in 2018, which isn't all that far away, 13
years away from now, the system goes into the red. That means more
money coming out of Social Security than going in.

Some in our country think that Social Security is a trust fund --
in other words, there's a pile of money being accumulated. That's just
simply not true. The money -- payroll taxes going into the Social
Security are spent. They're spent on benefits and they're spent on
government programs. There is no trust. We're on the ultimate
pay-as-you-go system -- what goes in comes out. And so, starting in
2018, what's going in -- what's coming out is greater than what's going
in. It says we've got a problem. And we'd better start dealing with
it now. The longer we wait, the harder it is to fix the problem.

Secondly, if you're a person who is retired or near retirement,
nothing will change, there is enough money. You're in good shape. I
know there are some who have heard talk about Social Security around
the country here, saying, oops, he's going to take away my check.
That's not going to happen. I don't care what the rhetoric is, what
the mailings say, what the TV ads say, you're in good shape. It's the
younger workers who ought to be asking the members of the Congress and
the President of the United States, what are you going to do to fix the
problem.

And I'm looking forward to working with Congress to fix the
problem. All ideas are on the table except running up the payroll
tax. And I'm convinced by setting aside partisan politics and focusing
on what's right for younger Americans, we can do the job that people
expect us to do here in Washington, D.C. (Applause.)

We're here to talk about class-action lawsuit abuse. And we've got
some experts here to help us understand what class-action lawsuits are
all about, and how best to effect good public policy. Look, there is a
bill working its way through the Senate now, and I want to thank both
Republicans and Democrat members of the Senate for working on that
bill. My call to them is to listen to the experts. And we're about to
hear from two -- actually three -- two people who have studied the
issue, and one who has actually lived with it.

It is important, for the sake of this country and for the sake of
our economy, to have a fair answer to a problem that is escalating.
The problem is people are filing suits all over the country in a state
courthouse that's affecting people in other states. And oftentimes
businesses are getting drug into it, or people are getting drug into it
that are unaware they're getting drug into it, and if they are getting
drug into it, when there's finally a settlement, they don't get much.
And the people -- the lawyers get a lot.

And so we've worked with Congress to come up with a reasonable
solution. And they've come up with a reasonable solution that says
interstate class-actions ought to be conducted in the federal court.
And my call to the Senate today is to get that bill done as quickly as
possible so we can get it to the House and get it to my desk. And the
Senate has got to pass the bill on the floor without amendment. They
need to pass a clean bill, one that makes sense for the American
people. (Applause.)

I have asked, and Walter Dellinger has kindly agreed to come. He
is a practicing attorney. He is a professor. He's so good at being an
attorney, he's teaching others how to be an attorney, at Duke
University, if I'm not mistaken. He was telling me today -- I don't
know if you know this or not, this falls in the "small world" category
-- and if our mutual friend is listening on C-SPAN, it will blow his
mind we're talking about him -- but I was raised in Midland, Texas, and
the fellow who lives across the street from him in North Carolina's
father, was the baby doctor for my three little brothers. (Laughter.)
Now, how about that for small world? Tell Rodin hello.

MR. DELLINGER: I will.

THE PRESIDENT: Walter, why are you interested in the issue? He's
actually served in government for the previous administration. He
represents the spirit needed to have good legal reform, and that is the
bipartisan spirit. And tell us why you're here and give us your
interest in the subject.

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: Tell people what a class-action is.

MR. DELLINGER: Well, a class-action -- the idea of class-action
started when we realized that often there were many people that had
small -- the same small injury. If I cheat a million people out of $10
apiece, I ought not be able to sit back and think, well, they'll never
be able to sue me because it's $10 apiece. So if they're really common
questions of law, and you can resolve the whole dispute in one action,
it's a very effective way of doing it.

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: So in other words, a class-action lawsuit that is
tried at a state level means you could be doing business in California,
but be sued in Illinois court.

MR. DELLINGER: That's right. And one of the problems is that you
sometimes have, in one of these state class-actions, a state court
judge making law for the whole country -- making law for D.C. or for
California, for Arizona, sitting right in West Virginia, or in
Illinois, when he's not elected by these other people.

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: Before we get to how it does it, why is it more
fair to be in the federal court, in your judgment? I think people need
to understand why the remedy is going to make the system more fair to
them. I mean, I agree with you completely that there needs to be a
judicial system that honors people who have been harmed. We want the
system to be fair. If you get hurt, you ought to have access. And
yet, on the other hand, we understand the cost of frivolous lawsuits,
people just filing lawsuits for the sake of filing lawsuits, forcing
people to settle even though there's no merit to the lawsuit.

But explain why going from a state court to a federal court, in
your judgment, would be -- he actually testified on the bill, so, I
mean, you talk about an expert, we're beyond just somebody who
theorizes, we're -- somebody who went up and front -- dared go to the
halls of the Senate and testified. How did Senator Cornyn treat you?

MR. DELLINGER: They did very well. (Laughter.) And Senator
Hatch.

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: It sounds fair to me. I mean, it sounds
reasonable. I think if somebody is out there wondering whether or not
this is a reasonable proposal, it's reasoned to use the federal courts
for what they were intended to be used for, which is adjudicate
disputes among the states, for example. Anyway, why is this fair,
beyond moving to the federal court? I interrupted you before. You
were saying, this bill is particularly fair because --

MR. DELLINGER: Well, because it still allows these cases to
proceed under the standards we've developed for where you can try cases
involving people from different states. You get into federal court,
and if some of the harmful amendments that are being suggested are
defeated so that you get a clean bill sent to you, the federal courts
will do what they've always done -- they look at a case involving
multiple states and they say: Can we fairly try this? Are the state
laws sufficiently alike that we can try this in one lawsuit? If
they're not, then you can bring those suits back in a single state --
everybody in Pennsylvania can bring a lawsuit in Pennsylvania courts.
But you can't do it for multiple states if you just tell judges -- you
can pick the law of one state, whether people in other states like that
law, or not.

And you're going to hear this afternoon some very telling examples
of what's gone wrong when one state makes law for the whole country,
without the rest of the country being able to participate. People in
Texas and North Carolina don't get to vote for who's the state court
judge in Illinois. And we don't get to vote on what the law should be
in those other places. And this is precisely designed for that.

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: Great job. Thanks for coming. Appreciate you
taking time.

He mentioned -- he said, they're trying to amend the bill. That's
code word for, they're trying to weaken the bill. They're trying to
make the bill not effective. That's why I called for a clean bill, and
Walter called for a clean bill, as well. And I'm confident that the
Senate will hear that call and get a good piece of legislation off the
floor. Then we'll move it to the House, and then it will get to my
desk quickly and we'll show progress, working together.

By the way, I repeat, this is a bill that is -- by a cosponsor with
Republicans and Democrats. It's a good piece of legislation.

Larry Mirel -- what do you do, Larry?

MR. MIREL: I'm the Commissioner of Insurance, Securities, and
Banking for the District of Columbia.

THE PRESIDENT: Right around the corner.

MR. MIREL: Right around the corner -- right across the street.

THE PRESIDENT: Right across the street. Well, that's good. So
that seems like an unusual connection. Here you are, sitting next to
the President talking about class-action lawsuit and it seems like
you're really not involved in the law, but are you?

MR. MIREL: Yes, indeed. And let me explain and add to what Walter
said before. My job -- I'm actually a state official -- and my job is
to protect the people of my jurisdiction, the District of Columbia, and
in particular, those who buy insurance. And I worry about that and I
take that seriously. I implement the laws of the District of Columbia,
as passed by the Council and approved by the Congress.

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: They settled because -- not necessarily because of
the merits of the lawsuit, they settled for threat of loss. In other
words, it's kind of like a lottery sometimes when the system isn't
balanced right.

MR. MIREL: Right. I'll give you some examples of it. The first
one settled $7.5 million to the attorneys who brought the suit, nothing
for the class members. Those class members are all over the United
States, including people in the District of Columbia, everybody who
bought a policy from that company. The second one settled for $10
million to the lawyers, nothing to the plaintiff class --

THE PRESIDENT: I'm beginning to get the picture of why there was
34 filed. Slowly but surely, the settlements are getting bigger.
Anyway --

MR. MIREL: Even the Association trial attorneys objected to that
one. So they went back and they gave something now to the members of
the class. What is it? One hundred dollars off your next life
insurance policy that you buy from that company.

THE PRESIDENT: If it's still around.

MR. MIREL: That's right. And the lawyers walk off with $10
million. Seven cases were settled; the total payout so far is $40
million. And nothing has gone to trial. And that's the real evil.

THE PRESIDENT: See, it's interesting. What he's saying is, is
that he has said -- he's doing his job in the District, and yet, a
lawsuit that affects people in the District begins to redefine what
you've laid out is what is fair.

MR. MIREL: That's exactly right. I'll give you another simple
example. There's a case in Los Angeles Superior Court claiming that
one of our very largest companies, State Farm, which is a mutual
company, has too much in reserves and should give that reserves back to
its members. Well, what I do for a living is make sure the companies
that sell insurance in this jurisdiction, including State Farm, have
enough reserves.

THE PRESIDENT: -- enough reserves. (Laughter.)

MR. MIREL: Right. And the notion that a jury of laypersons in the
Los Angeles County Court can overturn my decision --

THE PRESIDENT: Do your job better than you can -- yes.

MR. MIREL: That's the part that I have problems with.

THE PRESIDENT: It's an interesting -- it's an interesting
situation, isn't it? And it's one that really goes back to what --
what Walter was talking about as far as the framers' view of how a fair
system ought to work. If I were someone who was out there wondering
whether or not we were making the right decision, I would go back and
harken back to the papers of the Founding Fathers, when they talked
about adjudicating disputes like this. In this case, the jury doesn't
make the decisions for the good folks in Washington, D.C., a jury
afar.

We've also got with us Alita. Are you ready to go? All right, how
many kids do you got?

MS. DITKOWSKY: I have two children.

THE PRESIDENT: They don't happen to be here, are they?

MS. DITKOWSKY: Yes, they are.

THE PRESIDENT: I can see them. How old are they?

MS. DITKOWSKY: Marissa is 10 and Jessica is going to be nine in
two weeks -- three weeks.

THE PRESIDENT: Going to be nine. Fabulous. Well, happy
birthday-to-be. Got mom up here on stage. Pretty cool, huh?
(Laughter.) Where do you live?

MS. DITKOWSKY: I live in Commack. Commack, Long Island.

THE PRESIDENT: State? New York?

MS. DITKOWSKY: New York.

THE PRESIDENT: Not everybody knows where Commack is. Of course, I
did. (Laughter.) So why are you here? No --

MS. DITKOWSKY: Well, Mr. President --

THE PRESIDENT: Give us your story. This is a very interesting
tale.

MS. DITKOWSKY: Okay. Well, first, I would never believe in a
million years I'd be talking to you face-to-face, and I would never
believe that I'd be talking about my TV set. (Laughter.) But here
goes.

THE PRESIDENT: This is being recorded on film, so you can play it
back just to prove it actually happened. (Laughter.)

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: I'm going to stop you there. So you open up the
mail --

MS. DITKOWSKY: Right.

THE PRESIDENT: -- and somebody sends you a coupon.

MS. DITKOWSKY: Correct.

THE PRESIDENT: -- meaning that you were a party to a lawsuit.

MS. DITKOWSKY: Exactly.

THE PRESIDENT: -- but you didn't know you were the party to the
lawsuit.

MS. DITKOWSKY: Had no clue.

THE PRESIDENT: Interesting isn't it? Whew. (Laughter.) First,
I'm glad I wasn't the Thomson salesman, you know? (Laughter.) So you
get the -- what, you get a $50 --

MS. DITKOWSKY: A $50 rebate if you make a purchase of $100 or
more.

* * * * *

THE PRESIDENT: So, therefore, there should have been a recourse.
I mean, a just society is one in which she buys the TV that is a lousy
product, and there's a warranty, and there's some protections for a
consumer. They ought to reward her those protections.

MS. DITKOWSKY: And as a consumer of this product, we sent out a
warranty card that said if there's a problem with the TV, the company
is supposed to notify us.

THE PRESIDENT: Right. And so the TV company was wrong, and the
verdict was, guilty, and you got $25.

MS. DITKOWSKY: I got a $50 rebate --

THE PRESIDENT: Fifty dollars.

MS. DITKOWSKY: -- to go buy a new TV from them.

THE PRESIDENT: Yes, I know. So it made you even hotter.

MR. DELLINGER: Why did you get such a bad deal?

MS. DITKOWSKY: Well, as I was going to tell the President, that I
just found out that the lawyer in this case, who took this case to a
very small court in Madison County, Illinois --

THE PRESIDENT: Oh, yes, I've been there. (Laughter.)

MS. DITKOWSKY: Madison County. I am going to --

THE PRESIDENT: It is the most -- there are more lawsuits filed in
Madison County, Illinois, than anywhere in the country, I think. I
mean, I went there to talk about legal reform in Madison County,
Illinois. People are filing lawsuits there all the time. You had your
case heard in Madison County -- I cannot believe it. Anyway, keep
going.

MS. DITKOWSKY: Well, apparently this lawyer -- and nowhere is it
in the fine print of this little $50 coupon that this lawyer got $22
million.

THE PRESIDENT: We've got a problem.

MS. DITKOWSKY: Twenty-two million dollars. I'm still left with a
broken TV. He got $22 million. Where is the justice in this?
(Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT: Yes, and that's exactly why -- thank you. We're
all here because we want the system to be fair. The economy depends
upon a fair legal system. People's faith in the system, our country
depends upon a fair legal system. And what we're highlighting here is
the system isn't fair. And the positive news is, in this town, people
have come up with a fair solution that will treat people with respect
and give them justice when they need it, and at the same time, hold
people to account when they need to be held to account, without
affecting our capacity to grow our economy. Fairness is all we ask
for.

The scales of justice need to be balanced, and they're not balanced
today. And so good people from around the country, including Walter
and Larry, have come to the halls of Congress to help balance those
scales. And, fortunately, there are good senators and fair congressmen
who understand that all we seek is balance. And now is the time for
the United States Congress to balance the scales when it comes to
class-action lawsuits; to do their duty to make this country as good a
country as it can possibly be.

I want to thank our panelists for coming. I hope you've enjoyed
this as much as I have. I'm honored that you would take time and stay
over from getting back home to help explain the need for this country
to act on this important issue.